hardworkingstiff
Senior Member
- Location
- Wilmington, NC
The short story is on an underground diesel re-piping job, I had to make some controller modifications/replacements. Power for the 2 submerged pumps come from a panel in a remote building. The customer wanted the old indicator lights to light up when each pump was turned on. I told him I could do this with some relays and stay code compliant. He did not want to spend the extra money. The start-up tech for the new equipment decided to comply with the owners request w/out installing the control relays. The tech wired the 20-watt (120-volt) indicator lights with one leg of the pump power coming off of the load side of the starter and the neutral from the control power. The problem is the control power is coming through a separate conduit from a completely different electrical panel that is 300' from the panel that serves the pumps. IMO, this is a violation of 300.3(B).
Now the question. Does it really matter? It's a 20-watt light.
Now the question. Does it really matter? It's a 20-watt light.
